Heritage Trail Museums salute their volunteers

Volunteer Don Bourassa

Volunteer Don Bourassa

There are not many states that boast a history as rich as New Hampshire, which is something 15 museums on the Experience New Hampshire Heritage Trail will share with more than 200,000 visitors this year. At the heart of this experience, which takes visitors on a “trail” from Portsmouth to Plymouth as well as several spots north, east and west, are hundreds of volunteers.

“Our volunteers are so committed because they each have a personal passion for some aspect of what we do here,” said Lisa Simpson Lutts, executive director of the New Hampshire Boat Museum in Wolfeboro.

She said what is “remarkable” about their volunteers is the extent to which they have become involved in their operations, as she credits them with developing many of their programs. Examples of what volunteers do at the New Hampshire Boat Museum include teaching sailing, working on the boathouse tour and helping with the annual poker run fundraiser. Some also teach model radio controlled sailboat racing.

“Today, there are 15 distinct programs during the six month open season from Memorial Day weekend to Columbus Day weekend,” she said. “The programs are all run by the volunteers, each of whom considers their involvement as real work.”

For Don Bourassa, who volunteers his time at the Aviation Museum of NH in Londonderry, his participation reflects a lifelong love of aircraft and aviation in general. Noting he earned a private pilot’s certificate in 1972, he applied for and was hired as a line technician at a fixed base operator at the Manchester airport upon his retirement.

“It was there that I met a member of the New Hampshire Aviation Historical Society,” he said. “He asked if I would be interested in volunteering as a docent [tour guide] at the recently opened Aviation Museum.”

9 years later, he said he is still just as happy to be part of the operations at the Aviation Museum.

“I have enjoyed every minute of it,” he said. “I go home every day feeling good about myself and I usually have a story to share with my family.”

He said some of these stories relate to what he has learned about New Hampshire aviation history of which he acknowledged he initially knew very little. In conducting his own research at the Aviation Museum, he said he learned that New Hampshire aviation history can be traced back to the Civil War.

“Research also taught me that New Hampshire has several military aviators that distinguished themselves in wars past and present,” he added. “I learned that airplanes were built in New Hampshire and that a New Hampshire family built airplanes in Springfield, Mass.”

Volunteering his time at Exeter’s American Independence Museum, which focuses on colonial history, Mike Welch said his foray onto the Trail began after attending a Halloween open house at its Folsom Tavern.

“I have a deep love of American Colonial History, particularly the years leading up to the revolution,” he said. “So when I walked into Folsom Tavern and was greeted by many knowledgeable and enthusiastic volunteers dressed in period clothing, I knew I had found a new home.”

For Welch, his excitement at volunteering his time stems not just from what he refers to as “a treasure trove of history” within the Museum’s two buildings, but in his diverse role there.

“Having a varied background, I find myself helping out in various ways—sometimes a guide, sometimes a teacher and sometimes a period musical or living history performer, and even a militiaman,” he said. “There really is opportunity for everyone.”

Noting museums on the Trail collectively feature more than 25,000 items, Mike Culver, executive director of the Wright Museum of World War II in Wolfeboro, said he expects big things in 2016.

“From a strong core of volunteers to invested corporate sponsors and committed boards, our Trail quite literally brings history to life through relevant programs and fun events,” he said.

Museums on the Trail include Albacore Park, American Independence Museum, Aviation Museum of New Hampshire, The Belknap Mill, Castle in the Clouds, Lake Winnipesaukee Museum, Libby Museum, Millyard Museum, Museum of the White Mountains, New Hampshire Boat Museum, New Hampshire Farm Museum, Portsmouth Historical Society @ Discover Portsmouth, Remick Country Doctor Museum & Farm, Woodman Museum, and Wright Museum of World War II.

Museum Collaborative Celebrate NH History Week

Castle in the Clouds

In celebration of New Hampshire History Week from October 19 to October 25, several museums on The Portsmouth to Plymouth Museum Trail will display rare and unique items generally not available for public view.

During this week, one of the highlights on the Trail will include the iconic photograph of American servicemen raising the flag at Iwo Jima at the Wright Museum of World War II in Wolfeboro.

“Manchester native Rene Gagnon is the third figure to the right in the front row of servicemen,” said Michael Culver, executive director at the Wright Museum of World War II. “It was Gagnon who brought the flag up Mt. Suribachi.”

At the USS Albacore Museum in Portsmouth, Executive Director John Maier said they will create a special display about the USS Squalus loss and salvage off the coast of Portsmouth in 1939. At Remick Museum & Farm in Tamworth, Executive Director Pam Van Auken said they will offer a daily tour at 2pm of their Historic Captain Enoch Remick House, which is normally closed after Columbus Day.

“This home was built in 1808 and is on the National Register of Historic Places,” she added. “We will follow the tour with a brief country living demonstration that will vary in topic each day.”

Noting they will display an original handwritten letter signed by George Washington, Julie Williams, executive director of the American Independence Museum in Exeter, expressed enthusiasm at the “unprecedented collaboration” among the 14 Museums on the Trail.

“New Hampshire History Week is a perfect opportunity for the museums still open during that time of year,or choose to reopen to reveal a glimpse into the state’s rich history,” she said.

The Trail members are (south to north): Strawbery Banke Museum, Portsmouth; Albacore Park Museum, Portsmouth; American Independence Museum, Exeter; Millyard Museum, Manchester; Woodman Museum, Dover; New Hampshire Farm Museum, Milton; Cantebury Shaker Village, Cantebury; Belknap Mill Society, Laconia; Clark House Museum, Wolfeboro; Libby Museum, Wolfeboro; New Hampshire Boat Museum, Wolfeboro; Wright Museum of WWII History, Wolfeboro; Castle in the Clouds, Moultonborough; Remick Country Doctor Museum & Farm, Tamworth and The Museum of the White Mountains, Plymouth.

To learn more about the Trail, a full-color brochure is available at any of the participating museums or at select New Hampshire Rest Areas. Included in the brochure is a location map that allows visitors to plan their trips. To learn more about the Trail, visit www.nhmuseumtrail.org.